Inside the issue, "Rolling Stone" uncovers new details about the night Tsarnaev was captured. As he was hiding in the boat in Watertown, police negotiators told him his old wrestling coach had made a public plea for him to surrender. Police said reminding him of his old life was what convinced him to surrender.

The magazine reports Dzhokhar once hinted that the thought the 9/11 attacks could be justified. He allegedly told a friend who wanted to meet older brother, Tamerlan, "No, You don't want to meet him."

Rolling Stone claims Tamerlan Tsarnaev once told his mother he felt like there were "two people" inside him. She believed religion would cure him.

Some local residents vowed to stop reading the magazine.

"That's so strange. You do something horrible and there's fame?" one resident said.

"I was there that day, and my son still talks about the horror the two bombs, the blood. All I want is justice," another resident said.

Minute-by-minute: How bombers attacked, evidence hidden

Minute-by-minute: How bombers attacked, evidence hidden

New information continues to emerge about the two suspects in the Boston Marathon Bombing. Federal documents breakdown how the Boston Bombing suspects reportedly carried out the attack, and show how close friends attempted to hide evidence from investigators.

ABC News says Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told interrogators the brothers determined on Friday, April 12th they would target the Boston Marathon. Dzhokhar told investigators they learned to build functioning explosives much sooner than expected.

The two accused marathon bombers originally planned to attack Boston's Fourth of July celebration this year.

An eleven page criminal complaint gives a moment-by-moment account of how the government believes Dzhokhar and his brother Tamerlan placed the bombs along Boylston Street.

The first half of the criminal complaint mentions this surveillance video released. The investigator writes, "I have reviewed videotape footage taken from a security camera located on Boylston Street near the corner of Boylston and Gloucester Streets."

The complaint says both men are carrying large knapsacks. "The first man in this affidavit is bomber one, a young male, wearing a dark-colored baseball cap, sunglasses, a white shirt, dark coat and tan pants."

Bomber one is in front and bomber two is a few feet behind him. Additional security camera video taken from a location farther east on Boylston Street.

"The second man, whom I refer to in this affidavit as bomber two, is a young male, wearing a white baseball cap backwards, a grey hooded sweatshirt, a lightweight black jacket and dark pants," the investigator wrote in the federal complaint.

"There is probable cause to believe that bomber 1 is Tamerlan Tsarnaev and bomber 2 is his brother Dzhokhar Tsarnaev," the investigator writes in the complaint.

After turning onto Boylston Street, bomber one and bomber two can be seen walking eastward along the north side of the sidewalk toward the Marathon finish line.

Bomber one is in front and bomber two is a few feet behind him. Additional security camera video taken from a location farther east on Boylston Street.

Photographs taken across the street, show the men continuing to walk together eastward along Boylston Street toward Fairfield Street.

The criminal complaint refers to video footage take from a security camera above the doorway of the Forum Restaurant at 755 Boylston Street, the site of the second explosion. At 2:41pm, bomber one and bomber two can be seen standing together approximately one half block from the restaurant.

At approximately 2:42 pm (approximately seven minutes before the first blast), bomber one can be seen detaching himself from the crowd and walking east on Boylston Street toward the finish line. Approximately 15 seconds later, he can be seen passing directly in front of the Forum Restaurant and continuing in the direction of where the first explosion occurred. His backpack is still on his back.

At approximately 2:45pm. bomber two can be seen detaching himself from the crowd and walking east on Boylston Street toward the marathon finish line. He appears to have the thumb of his right hand hooked under the strap of his knapsack and a cell phone in his left hand.

Approximately 15 seconds later, he can be seen stopping directly in front of the Forum Restaurant and standing near the metal barrier among numerous spectators, with his back to the camera facing the runners.

The suspect can be seen apparently slipping his knapsack onto the ground. A photograph taken from the opposite side of the street shows the knapsack on the ground at bomber two's feet.

The Forum restaurant video shows bomber two remained in the same spot for approximately four minutes. At some point, he appears to look at his phone, which is approximately at waist level, and may be manipulating the phone.

"Approximately 30 seconds before the first explosion, he lifts his phone to his ear as if he is speaking on his cell phone and keeps it there for approximately 18 seconds. A few seconds after he finishes the call, the large crowd of people around him can be seen reacting to the first explosion," the federal complaint says.

Virtually everyone turns east toward the finish line and stares in apparent bewilderment and alarm. Bomber two, virtually alone among the individuals in front of the restaurant appears calm. He glances to the east, and then calmly and rapidly begins moving to the west, away from the direction of the finish line.

"He walks away without his knapsack, having left it on the ground where he had been standing.Approximately 10 seconds later, an explosion occurs in the location where bomber two had placed his knapsack," the federal complaint says.

The criminal complaint says investigators have looked at photos and videos, and say nothing in that location could have caused an explosion of that nature other than bomber 2's knapsack.

Investigators said they compared Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicle photos of Dzhokar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev with the images captured by surveillance video, and investigators believe they are the same person.

Two days before the FBI searched Tsarnaev's dorm room, the U.S. Attorney's office alleges Dias Kadyrbayev and Azamat Tazhayakov removed items from his dorm room.

April 17, 2013: Dias Kadyrbayev, charged on May 1 with conspiring to obstruct justice, meets with Tsarnaev at his dorm room. Notices the Boston Bombing suspect (who had yet to be identified by the FBI) had given himself a short haircut.

April 18, approximately 3pm: Azamat Tazhayakov, charged on May 1 with conspiring to obstruct justice, attended an afternoon class at UMASS-Dartmouth and was given a ride home by Tsarnaev, who dropped Tazhayakov off at approximately 4pm.

April 18, 5pm: The FBI releases photos of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev to the media. The photos are broadcast and shared on social media.

April 18, 6pm-7pm: Kadyrbayev, Tazhayakov and a third man, Robel Phillipos, met at the UMASS-Dartmouth campus and went into Tsarnaev's room.

Tsarnaev's roommate let them in, saying Tsarnaev had left a couple of hours earlier.

April 18, 2013 8:43 - 8:48pm: Kadyrbayev texted Tsarnaev and told him he looked like the suspect on TV; Tsarnaev replied with a text that said "lol" and other things Kadyrbayev interpreted as jokes such as "you better not text me" and "come to my room and take whatever you want."

April 18, 9pm: While Tazhaykov was out shopping, he received a text message from Kadyrbayev asking him if he had seen the news.

Tazhaykov returned to the Carriage Drive apartment and found Kadyrbayev waiting for him outside.

Kadyrbayev showed Tazhaykov photos of Tsarnaev broadcast by news media. Kadyrbayev sent a text message to Phillipos telling him to go to Tsarnaev's dorm room.

April 18, 10pm: Tazhaykov, Kadyrbayev and Phillipos went to Tsarnaev's UMass-Dartmouth dorm room and were let him by his roommate. Before they went in, Kadyrbayev showed Tazhaykov a text message from Tsarnaev said, "I'm about to leave if you need something in my room take it."

When Tazhaykov learned of this message, he believed he would never see Tsarnaev alive again.

Once inside, Kadyrbayev located a backpack that contained an emptied-out cardboard tube that Tazhaykov described as fireworks. Tazhaykov said he had seen Tsarnaev with fireworks a couple months earlier, which Tazhaykov, Tsarnaev and others had set off along the banks of the Charles River in Boston.

The discovery frightened Tazhaykov because the powder had been emptied from the tube. Kadyrbayev also found a jar of Vaseline in the room and Tazhaykov believed he used it "to make bombs."

At that point, Tazhaykov believed Tsarnaev was involved in planting the bombs at the Boston Marathon.

Kadyrbayev and Tazhaykov removed the backpack, Vaseline and Tsarnaev's laptop from the dorm and together with Phillipos took them to the Carriage Drive apartment.

At approximately 10:30 pm on April 18, MIT officer Sean Collier was killed and an explosive shootout occurred in Watertown a few hours later.

According to court documents, around midnight on April 18, an individual carjacked a vehicle at gunpoint in Cambridge. When the victim rolled down the window, the man reached in, opened the door, and entered the victim's vehicle.

The man with the gun forced the victim to drive to another location, where they picked up a second man. The two men put something in the truck of the victim's vehicle.The second man entered the victim's vehicle and sat in the rear passenger seat. The man with the gun and second man spoke to each other in a foreign language.

While they were driving, the man with the gun demanded money from the victim, who gave the man 45 dollars. One of the men got the victim to hand over his ATM card and password. They drove to the ATM and attempted to withdraw money from the victim's account.

The two men and the victim then drove to a gas station store in the vicinity of 816 Memorial Drive in Cambridge. The two men got out of the car, and the victim escaped.

The vehicle was located a short time later by police in Watertown. As the men drove down Dexter Street in Watertown, they threw at least two small IEDs out of the car.

A gunfight ensued between the car's occupants and police. One of the men was severely injured and remained at the scene. The other managed to escape in the car.

The vehicle was later found abandoned a short distance away and an intact low-grade explosive device was discovered inside.

In addition, from the scene of the shootout on Laurel Street in Watertown, the FBI recovered two unexploded IEDs as well as the remnants of numerous exploded IEDs.

The complaint says the carjacker who was severely injured in the shootout with police was taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital where he was pronounced dead. FBI fingerprint analysis identified him as Tamerlan Tsarnaev. His identity also match RMV records.

A preliminary examination of the explosive devices used at the Boston Marathon revealed that they were low grade explosives housed in pressure cookers.

A preliminary examination of the explosive devices discovered at the scene in Watertown and in the abandoned vehicle revealed similarities to the explosives used in the Boston Marathon, the criminal complaint indicated.

April 19, 6am: Phillipos saw news reports that identified Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev as the Marathon bombers and stated Tamerlan was dead.

Kadyrbayev decided to throw away Tsarnaev's backpack taken from his dorm room the previous night with the fireworks inside. Tazhaykov agreed. The backpack was thrown into the apartment complex's garbage.

The complaint details the moments before the capture of bombing suspect 2. The investigation revealed the suspect was hiding in a covered boat on Franklin Street in Watertown.

After a stand-off between the boat's occupant and the police involving gunfire, the individual was removed from the boat and searched.

The complaint says a University of Massachusetts Dartmouth identification card, credit cards and other forms of identification were found in his pockets. All of them identified the man as Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He had visible injuries to his head, neck, legs and hand.

On April 21, the FBI searched Dzhokhar's dorm room in Pine Dale Hall on the UMass-Dartmouth campus. The FBI seized, among other things, a large pyrotechnic, a black jacket and a white hat of same general appearance as those by bomber two at the Boston Marathon.

April 24: U.S. officials say the Boston Marathon explosions that killed three people and wounded more than 260 were triggered by a remote-controlled detonator.

The officials said the bombs were not very sophisticated. One of the officials described the detonator as "close-controlled" - meaning it had to be triggered within several blocks of the bombs.

April 25: The FBI conducts a search of a New Bedford landfill for clues in the marathon attack

April 26: Agents recovered Tsarnaev's backpack from the landfill.

Inside the backpack, agents recovered fireworks, a jar of Vaseline and a UMASS-Dartmouth homework assignment sheet, among other things.

May 1: Boston Police announce three more suspects were taken into custody in the Boston Marathon Bombings.

Azamat Tazhayakov (left) and Dias Kadyrbayev (center) are charged with conspiring to obstruct justice. A third man, Robel Phillipos (not pictured here), is charged with making false statements to federal investigators.

A third man, Robel Phillipos, is charged with making false statements to federal investigators.

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